What was advertised in a revolutionary American newspaper 250 years ago today?

“LINEN to be SOLD at the Manufactory in Union-street.”
Nearly a year after the battles at Lexington and Concord, many colonizers continued to support the American cause through the decisions they made in the marketplace. Such efforts began before the Revolutionary War. Colonizers attempted to use commerce as political leverage, departing from the imperial system they previously embraced. They experienced a British Empire defined by commerce rather than conquest, one in which England produced goods and the colonies consumed them. When Parliament enacted new commercial regulations and other measures the colonies found oppressive in the 1760s and 1770s, they enacted nonimportation agreements. Simultaneously, they encouraged “domestic manufactures” in the colonies as alternatives to imported goods.
That movement led to the establishment of “the Manufactory in Union-street” in Philadelphia. In the April 13, 1776, edition of the Pennsylvania Evening Post, the proprietors advertised “LINEN to be SOLD” there. They also informed the public that they sought to hire two or three journeymen weavers who would enjoy “an advantageous seat of work.” Yet “domestic manufactures” did not solely refer to goods produced in the colonies as opposed to those made elsewhere. “Domestic manufactures” could also mean goods produced in homes, in domestic spaces, often by women. Although not as fine as imported fabrics, wearing “homespun” cloth became a mark of distinction because of the political principles at play. In addition to the journeymen to be employed “at the said factory,” the proprietors announced, “Weavers that have got looms in their own houses … will meet with good encouragement, the best prices, and constant employment.” The “Manufactory in Union-street” served as a clearinghouse for textiles produced on site and in homes in and near Philadelphia. It provided employment for local men and women and merchandise for consumers, allowing everyone involved to support the American cause as more and more colonizers considered the possibility of declaring independence rather than a redress of their grievances and a return to how the empire operated before the imperial crisis.




























